Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
hint.
"Okay," Rafael said. "But I left those whatsits
upstairs. Those Iliads."
I pressed my face against his shoulder and
laughed. I laughed so hard, I could feel it in my
stomach, in my chest. It was the most peculiar
feeling in the world: that I was happy, untouchably
happy, no matter the tube sticking out of my gut, no
matter the television vans sitting outside our
doors. Untouchable. That's the word. Nothing
could touch me so long as I was with Rafael.
Nothing but Rafael.
And speaking of the television vans--they sure did
their jobs. Day eight, day nine, day ten, the news
anchors were all over the reservation with their
boom mics and their makeup artists. Goofy kids
stood in the background, waving, and I shook my
head to see it. I didn't have their mettle, I guess,
because the last thing I wanted was my face on
TV. It became a real hassle to dart from tree to
tree and hope no one caught me.
"I know what you mean," Annie agreed, when we
went to the grotto one afternoon with Zeke, Rafael,
and Aubrey. "You can't even hang your clothes out
to dry without someone shoving a camera in your
face."
"You don't know how lucky you are!" Zeke
complained, turning on her. "I keep
trying
to get
my face on TV, but they're not interested!"
"I can't imagine why," Annie said serenely.
"Yeah, me neither! Meredith told them to stay
away from her ranch, though. That's probably got
something to do with it."
I made a mental note of the fact that Zeke still
wasn't living with his father.
Day twelve arrived, the official day of eviction,
and I'm sure I'm not exaggerating when I say that
the whole of the reserve collectively held its
breath. We woke early in the morning and went
out on our porches, each of us watching the
horizon. I sat with Dad and Granny and Racine
and the kids, Jessica sleepily rubbing her eyes.
Nary a steamroller was in sight.
"There's power in numbers," Granny said wisely.
And I guess there really was. The days came and
went. The visitors started dwindling. One by one,
the news vans packed up their kits and drove off
into the sunset. Only a single anchorwoman stayed
behind, no doubt trying to see if she could squeeze
one more story out of the reservation. I guess she
couldn't, though, because she eventually left, too.
"It was amazing," Annie said, when we finally
went back to school. "Wasn't it? All those
strangers showing up to help us. It really makes
you feel...I don't know. Like the world is mostly
good."
Maybe she was onto something there.
I've heard plenty of people complain about how
unbearable their friends can be when they're in
love. How mushy, sappy, and totally stupid they
become when they're talking about the object of
their affections.
My built in defense mechanism is that I can't talk to
begin with. I can't run my mouth off in front of
Annie or Aubrey about how great Rafael is, and
creative, and hilarious, and soft-hearted, and blue-
eyed, and blah-blah-blah. That's probably a good
thing. Same-sex relationships have been a part of
the Shoshone culture for millennia, but talking
about your relationship, same-sex or otherwise, is
a huge no no. In fact, as recent as the 1900s, the
Shoshone would consider their kin mentally ill if
they displayed affection in public. Like kissing.
Back before foreigners colonized America,
Shoshone didn't even kiss with their mouths. They
kissed by rubbing cheeks. I guess the Europeans
taught them the mouth thing, which strikes me as
kind of odd. "Hi, I'm invading your country. Let
me put my tongue in your mouth." You know
what's weirder? When you kiss someone, it has
the same chemical effect on your brain as taking a
hit of cocaine. I'm serious. Not that I've ever
taken cocaine.
Anyway, I think I can understand why people in
love are such a pain in the ass. I'm sure I would
have been a pain in the ass myself had I had the
verbal ability. Because now that everyone was
starting to relax, now that it looked like the
reservation might actually be safe, there was
nothing I wanted to do but be with Rafael.
I still don't know what he found attractive about
me. I think I'll go to my grave maintaining that God
set the bar pretty low when he tossed my body
together. And with that stomach pump sticking out
of my gut, I was more grotesque than usual.
But he never acted as though he were repulsed by
me. He was gentle when he took my shirt off,
when he stroked the flat planes of my chest and the
freckles on my belly; his hand hovered above my
PEG, and he touched it just lightly, and he drew me
close in his arms and buried his face against the
scars on my neck, like he was apologizing for
something that wasn't his fault. When he tugged my
jeans down my waist, agonizingly slow, my pulse
dizzyingly fast with anticipation, it was like he
was savoring every second; when he looked at me,
it was like he saw me in a way no human can ever
see another, in a way I knew I would never be able
to see myself. He made me want him; he made me
love him in ways I didn't know a person could
love; he made me feel safe inside my skin.
I'm sure the people around us must have known, in
some way, what we were up to--like Annie
noticed when we didn't show up at the grotto, or
Mr. Red Clay noticed when we forgot our
homework, or Dad noticed when I spent exorbitant
amounts of time at Rafael's house--but I didn't
particularly care. I was young and stupid and in
love and I just wanted to be in love. And really,
none of us knows for sure when his days are up.
It's morbid, but having cancer--having a stupid
feeding tube hanging out of my stomach--had taught
me impermanence, if nothing else. Anyone can die
at any given moment. It doesn't matter whether
you're healthy or weak. I think what really matters
is that you had a good time.
I sound like I'm eighty years old.
In any case, nice as it was to spend all that time
with Rafael, it drew to a pretty quick close in
March. March was when my speech therapist
came to the reservation.
His name was Jim Snowy Owl, and he was a
Lakota man from way up north. I don't know how
Dr. Stout managed to get her hands on him. He
was about fifty years old, his hair a grizzled gray
peppered with black. The first day I opened my
door to see him standing on the front porch, I had
the impression he was on the warpath.
He didn't say a word--just grunted at me and let
himself into my house.
When I say that Mr. Snowy Owl was a speech
therapist, I don't mean that he had come to
Nettlebush to teach me how to speak. I didn't even
have vocal cords anymore--it probably would
have been easier for him to teach a dog to speak.
Part of a speech therapist's repertoire, though, is
that he knows everything there is to know about the
inner workings of the human throat. Mr. Snowy
Owl was here to help me learn to swallow again.
The sooner I could swallow on my own, the
sooner I could get rid of that stupid stomach pump.
Mr. Snowy Owl was one eccentric guy. He had
me lie on my back on the floor while he burned
goldenseal root in a ceramic dish. Maybe the
fumes were supposed to help open my throat or
something; I don't know. He never spoke except in
fragmented sentences and grunts. Pretty ironic for
a speech therapist.
Once the goldenseal ritual was over with, he
showed me a bunch of ridiculous-looking
exercises for my jaws and my tongue. Those I was
actually familiar with, in a cursory way; I had gone
to a speech therapist when I was little, back when
my throat was first cut. Granny watched over us
with reproving eyes while she sat behind her
loom. Mr. Snowy Owl had me tilt my head
forward while I lay prone and roll my neck joints
this way and that. He had me feel my Adam's
apple with my fingertips and practice pushing on it
manually until I felt like I was going to gag.
But for all his patience, I still couldn't swallow.
Racine tried to feed me slaw at dinnertime. I had
to spit it back out.
"You're getting there, hon," she said, rubbing my
back.
"Cubby," Dad said, across the picnic table from
us. "Are you thinking about participating in the sun
dance this year?"
I sat up straight and grinned. The annual sun dance
was the Plains way of thanking the planet for its
generosity. I'd missed it last year because of foster
care.
"What's a sun dance?" Racine asked.
"It's for men only," Dad explained, a muted smile
finding its way to his lips.
Racine put her hands on her hips. "Are you telling
me I can't come?"
"I don't know, am I?"
There's nothing more mortifying than watching
your dad flirt. I excused myself quickly from the
table and went to sit with Rosa and her baby, a
crowd of adoring women--and Robert--already
gathered around the pair.
I had wondered for a long time about the sun
dance, and now my wondering drew to a close. A
few days later, and very early in the morning, Dad
crept into my room and shook me awake.
"Put your regalia on," he whispered.
I stumbled out of bed, half asleep, while he went
downstairs. I dressed clumsily, a ten minute
project, and went looking for him.
It was strange how different Dad looked in
regalia. His face was still the same, but to see him
in burnt orange deerhide, the traditional Shoshone
garments, he really looked like he belonged to a
different era. Sometimes it makes me sad that
Carlisle Indian School did such a good job of
forcing Native Americans to look and talk like
everyone else.
Dad seemed to be having second thoughts. He
perused me, worried. "Maybe you're not healthy
enough..."
I waved my hands in protest. The shaman always
oversaw the sun dance to make sure the dancers
didn't get hurt.
"Alright," Dad said dubiously. "But if I think
you're in any physical distress, I'm taking you out
of there myself."
We didn't stick around for breakfast; fasting is a
part of the sun dance protocol. We left the house
together, Dad locking the door. We walked
through the reservation, the houses dark, most of
the community still fast asleep.
We walked the route to the badlands, where men
of different ages started to join us, each in his own
version of the Plains regalia. Some of those men
were very, very old. None were younger than
sixteen. Nobody talked. This was a holy journey,
after all; our attention belonged on the journey at
hand.
Down the gulches we walked, across the dry
gullies, past the crumbling crevices that posed the
threat of landslides. The ground was very
slippery, not ideal for moccasins. Canyons
reached for the starry sky, tallest of all a lone
promontory overlooking a grove of southern oak
trees. That promontory was one of Rafael's
favorite hideouts.
The man at the front of our group--Mr. Knows the
Woods, a member of our tribal council--veered
suddenly left. We followed him. The terrain was
less slippery here, which made me think this was
an oft-traveled trail. Mr. Knows the Woods led us
behind a canyon wall. I realized we were headed
to the shaman's house.
The shaman's house was as antiquated as you can
possibly get. Built into the curve of the
canyonside, preceded by gardens of peat moss and
sand, it was essentially a wickiup: animal hide